Thursday, March 21, 2013

For the most part, Facebook and Twitter have pretty much
killed my blog. Topics that used to turn into 1,000 words are now covered in
less than 140 characters. But yesterday
I made a comment on a friends’ post, a one liner that I now feel deserves a
little more attention. Deserves is a little heavy, but hey, I just wanted to
ramble on, and thought I’d do it here, rather than a few dozen comments on his
wall.

You better sit down for this. Oh, you are? Well, I hope
no one knocks on your stall door. I’ve been listening to the radio a little bit
more, mostly sports talk, but when the Kyd is in the car, we have to tune into
the local top 40 station. And I am dying to know: why do people still call in
to request a song?

Seriously, it makes zero sense to me. It’s 2013. There’s
no logical reason for this behavior. Latest reports say that over 160 million
American’s have internet access, a third of the population. I’m not sure if
that includes toddlers and babies, so we’ll assume it does. I’m also willing to bet that the percentage is
higher in homes with a radio and a telephone. If you have the internet, you can
listen to any song you have ever heard in just a matter of seconds. So why take
the time to call in to some radio show, be put on hold (if you even get
through) then request a song that they play every 12 minutes anyway?

Based on my research, which consists of being in the car
with my daughter when these people call in, I feel it’s safe to say that the
average requester is a 14.32 year old girl from a middle class family. So not
only is she likely to have internet access, she also has an iPod and there’s a
very good chance she also has a smart phone of some kind. She’s not at work,
unless she’s babysitting. In which case, she may not have permission to use the
computer, but she probably doesn’t have permission to ignore the kids for 12
minutes while she attempts to call in and request a song.

The only conclusion I can draw is, the 14 year old girl
is calling to request a song just to hear her voice on the radio for 22
seconds. The good: they should only have 14 minutes and 38 seconds left of “fame.”
The bad: she still has 14 minutes and 38 seconds left of “fame.” The real truth
here: teenage girls talk too much.

Monday, March 4, 2013

There’s a line from
Rounders that I love to quote, “I feel like Buckner walking back into Shea.”
Mike drops this gem as he returns to the scene of his greatest defeat, and he’s
playing for his life as he’s $25k in debt and owes most of it to the wrong kind
of people. Including his nemesis, who took Mike’s bankroll a few months back
and killed his dream of entering the World Series of Poker.

It’s a killer line, and
life (luckily) doesn’t present too many opportunities for me to properly use
it. Headed to the dentist, or the DMV, are the most likely scenarios for me. And
then yesterday, the Kyd and I were invited to join some friends for a trip to
the local mall, Oak Park Mall, where I worked at Lenscrafters for seven years.
Since leaving in 2005, I’ve been back twice. Once, just a few weeks later, I
went to say hi to some friends that still worked there, and then a year later
to run an errand. So I haven’t been back in over five years.

“Just walking in here
makes me queasy. The Brick walls. The ----ing mopes at the tables. The musty
smell. I feel like Buckner walking back into Shea/”

All true. It looks almost
the exact same, even some familiar faces at the pizza joint. It’s not all bad
memories. In those seven years, I made some great friends. But we always joked
that leaving the mall felt a lot like being paroled. So while I love the
Rounders’ line, it’s not completely accurate. I felt more like Lohan walking
into a parole hearing.

The trip down memory lane
ended pretty fast. It was quickly replaced by a feeling that’s becoming more
common these days. I felt old. It’s not uncommon for me to be around the Kyd
and her friends at either a volleyball game or a school event, and I never
really feel old there. In fact, it usually feels like it wasn’t that long ago
that I was her age. It’s a totally different vibe at the mall. It looks like a
scene out of “The Walking Dead” with texting teens coming from every direction.
The groans even made them sound like zombies, and they shuffle their feet in
the same manor. That’s when it hit me. I’m old. Even though I remember being
that age, and spending way too much time at the mall, I felt more like the guy
shouting “get off my lawn!” than I felt like one of them.

The feeling was compounded
by the fact that it wasn’t so long ago that I spend the majority of my week
among them. So much had remained the same, but the changes are pretty noticeable.
Mainly, and sadly, it’s fashion. Girls always look older. A fact that used to make me a little nervous
when I was younger, but now that there’s a girl that I’m responsible for, it’s
both terrifying and I suddenly want to go all Michonne on every teenage boy.
When I was there, everyone wore jeans. Now the girls are wearing the same
tights and boots that their mothers wear, while the doofi (I think that’s the
plural for doofus) have jeans hanging off their backside (I may have been
somewhat guilty of that many moons ago, get it?), ridiculous haircuts with as
much hairspray as my sister used in the 80’s complete with a smug look that
really needs to be slapped off of them. I guess that urge isn’t all that new
either, as I was an uncle before I could drive, and as a result I’ve always had
an overly portative streak in me. But there’s something different about the
latest iteration of teens. And they make me feel old, which brings up the first
line from Rounders:

“Listen, here’s the thing.
If you can’t spot the sucker in the first half hour at the table, then you ARE
the sucker.”

I looked, and I didn’t see
the old guy in the mall. So I was the old guy. Blech.